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Nanoscale optical imaging of multi-junction MoS2-WS2 lateral heterostructure

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 Added by Dmitri Voronine
 Publication date 2017
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Two-dimensional monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have unique optical and electronic properties for applications pertaining to field effect transistors, light emitting diodes, photodetectors, and solar cells. Vertical interfacing of WS2 and MoS2 layered materials in combination with other families of 2D materials were previously reported. On the other hand, lateral heterostructures are particularly promising for the spatial confinement of charged carriers, excitons and phonons within an atomically-thin layer. In the lateral geometry, the quality of the interface in terms of the crystallinity and optical properties is of paramount importance. Using plasmonic near-field tip-enhanced technology, we investigated the detailed nanoscale photoluminescence (nano-PL) characteristics of the hetero-interface in a monolayer WS2-MoS2 lateral heterostructure. Focusing the laser excitation spot at the apex of a plasmonic tip improved the PL spatial resolution by an order of magnitude compared to the conventional far-field PL. Nano-PL spatial line profiles were found to be more pronounced and enhanced at the interfaces. By analyzing the spectral signals of the heterojunctions, we obtained a better understanding of these direct band gap layered semiconductors, which may help to design next-generation smart optoelectronic devices.

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Integration of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) into functional optoelectronic circuitries requires an understanding of the charge transfer across the interface between the TMD and the contacting material. Here, we use spatially resolved photocurrent microscopy to demonstrate electronic uniformity at the epitaxial graphene/molybdenum disulfide (EG/MoS2) interface. A 10x larger photocurrent is extracted at the EG/MoS2 interface when compared to metal (Ti/Au) /MoS2 interface. This is supported by semi-local density-functional theory (DFT), which predicts the Schottky barrier at the EG/MoS2 interface to be ~2x lower than Ti/MoS2. We provide a direct visualization of a 2D material Schottky barrier through combination of angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy with spatial resolution selected to be ~300 nm (nano-ARPES) and DFT calculations. A bending of ~500 meV over a length scale of ~2-3 micrometer in the valence band maximum of MoS2 is observed via nano-ARPES. We explicate a correlation between experimental demonstration and theoretical predictions of barriers at graphene/TMD interfaces. Spatially resolved photocurrent mapping allows for directly visualizing the uniformity of built-in electric fields at heterostructure interfaces, providing a guide for microscopic engineering of charge transport across heterointerfaces. This simple probe-based technique also speaks directly to the 2D synthesis community to elucidate electronic uniformity at domain boundaries alongside morphological uniformity over large areas.
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